Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Robby (00:00):
George I've got a bone to
pick with you.
Fire away.
I've been meaning to ask you,it's it's bothered me since you
mentioned it.
And I figured what better wayto ask you than to ask you live?
George (00:13):
I'd be upset if you
asked me in private.
Yeah.
Robby (00:16):
I figured.
And I didn't want to upset youas much as what you said upset
me.
I really need I need to knowthe answer, the truth here.
Okay.
Do you really order chocolatewhen you go to the movies?
What's it called?
Choctop?
A chock mint chock top?
Do you seriously?
Is that a flavor and do youactually get it?
Because I might have to cut youoff.
George (00:35):
I could say, I could say
now.
Like I could say yes.
But I feel that you know youthink I could you sometimes I'm
muck around and you don't knowif I'm lying or not.
I feel like if I call my wifelive right now.
Call her, call her.
And call her.
Call her.
I'm just gonna ask her thequestion.
And I'll put her on speaker.
Right now, we're gonna this ishold it close to the mic.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Yeah.
George (00:56):
Hey, Miss Lady.
You're you are live on thepodcast.
I need to ask you a question.
What?
You are live on the podcastright now.
Okay, we're filming.
Oh my god.
Just wait, just wait.
I need to ask you a question.
You have to answer honestly.
And Stevie's in the car too.
What flavor Chock Top do Iorder every single time when we
(01:18):
go to the movies?
Peppermint Ross.
Robby (01:24):
Every single time.
Thank you.
That's all.
Bye.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Weirdo.
Bye.
Robby (01:28):
Bye.
Well, at least she thinksyou're a weirdo too.
Every time.
My favorite one.
So this is going to be thefinal episode of Million Dollar
Days Around.
Come join me.
I'm starting a U1 calledmillion dollar Choc Tops.
Million Dollar Chocts ChocTops.
Speaking of the name, I wasactually thinking this real
sideways note.
(01:49):
We should get um you know whoshould we should reach out to?
The man who gives away amillion bucks in a day.
Wow, who's that?
Adrian Portelli.
Oh, cool.
That would be such a fitting.
Yeah.
Um, so we should probably reachout to him, Adrian.
If you're watching this, we'dlove to have you on.
Or listening.
Um in your Lambo.
In your yeah, in your Lambo.
George (02:07):
Or your chopper or your
Jet or wherever you want to
listen to it.
Yeah.
Robby (02:10):
What colour's your
bugetti?
George (02:12):
Sig question.
Robby (02:14):
Anyway.
So chock top, chock bin, chocktop.
Fair enough.
George (02:18):
Yeah.
Sorry, man.
Robby (02:19):
I'm disappointed.
Uh, but we'll make it up toyou.
Uh all right.
George, today the date is the23rd of October, and yesterday,
yesterday there was a hugebreakthrough in the AI world.
And you told me about it.
I was like, let me let meexplain to everyone uh that is
listening so they understand.
This is gonna air, we'rerecording this on the 23rd of
(02:41):
October, this is gonna air byMonday.
Now, if you're listening tothis, by the time you hear this,
it wouldn't, this thingwouldn't have even been out for
a week yet.
But you've probably heard ofwhat ChatGPT is.
And right now, Chat GPT orOpenAI has developed their own
browser.
Okay, your browser.
So think the thing you openwhen you want to access
(03:02):
something on the internet, yourMicrosoft Surface or your uh
Google Chrome, most people use,or if you're an Apple user, some
people use Safari, right?
OpenAI has developed its ownone and it's got chat GPT built
in.
Meaning anything you're doing,you've instantly got access to
chat.
You can you can be like writingan email if you're using the uh
(03:23):
uh your emails on the browser,you can instantly be like, hey,
reply to this person.
And it's already readeverything that's there.
George (03:32):
So can I log on to my
okay?
This makes it a I think I wasin a headspace about that.
Robby (03:38):
Let me continue on, let
me continue on.
All right, let me continue onfor everyone.
Okay.
So I brought George into theroom and I was like, George,
come into the room, you're notgonna believe this.
It had been out for 11 hours.
I was like, George, come intothe room, you're not gonna
believe this.
Um come, come, come, come lookat this.
And he comes into my office andI'm like, check this out.
And I had Chat GPT working onmy computer for me.
(04:01):
And I said, Hey, go find Georgein the CRM and send him a text.
And it went through the CRM,searched for George, found him,
jumped in, sent him a text.
And I looked at George and Iwas like, I was like, you know,
like, wow.
George just looked at it and hesaid, I could have done that
way quicker.
And I was like, What?
Like, how are you not?
(04:21):
You would eight, by the way,I've shown maybe at this point,
it's been out for 24 hours.
I've shown maybe six people.
Everyone blown away has beenblown away.
Every single person except foryou.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
I've still not blown away.
George (04:35):
That's cool, but I'm not
blown away.
Yeah, I'm all I think I wasmore pumped about jumping on
your trampoline.
Um you were you were jumping onyour trampoline.
Um I'm not doing these things.
You were, dude.
Like I remember day one whenyou said, Hey, I've just tried
this thing out called Chat GPT,and that was what, a week?
Robby (04:52):
Yeah, and dude, there's
still people.
I get people now today comingto me saying, I wish I'd
listened to you.
George (04:57):
Yeah, cool.
Saying, I'm good.
Robby (04:59):
I wish I'd listened to
you.
You told me to try it, and ittook me two years.
George (05:02):
Just like you could be
the new Gary V.
We'll call you Robbie, we'llcall you Robbie.
Robbie V.
Robby (05:06):
Robbie C.
Robbie C.
George (05:07):
That's still that flows.
C double E.
C double, yes.
Fuck, that's so good.
Change your change yourchannel.
I'm gonna update my uh yourprofile name.
My Robbie C.
Robby (05:19):
Instagram handle.
The handle, that's what I wasthat's what I tried to do.
Instagram handle, uh, Robbie C.
Robbie C.
George (05:24):
George, if it's
available, I'll do it right now.
That's fucking cool.
You think I won't do it?
I don't even know how to do it.
I am pumped.
Hey, hey, I've got somefantastic news thing as we're
talking.
Actually, before we get intothat, before we get into that.
So I think that I was I waswhen you called me, I was
fucking flustered, notflustered, I was just in the
zone.
Deep work.
So I think when I came in,yeah.
I think when I came in as well,my mine's still with numbers
(05:45):
and shit I was doing on mycomputer and whatnot.
So yeah, that makes a bit moresense now.
It's an actual browser like aChrome, like um Safari.
What's the one?
Edge, is that what Microsofthas?
Robby (05:55):
Yeah, what did I call it?
Service.
That's a computer.
The service, yeah, sorry, Edge,whatever it is.
George (05:59):
Yeah, those those ones.
Robby (06:00):
So who now uses Microsoft
then?
Who does who uses PCs?
That's silly.
That's yeah.
Oh, and does it have PCs yet?
We should add that it's onlyavailable on Mac.
George (06:08):
Yes, that's what I was
gonna ask you.
Because I've I only use PC.
That's the joke for everyone.
But the so if you were loggedonto Facebook on the browser,
you could be like, hey, findthis photo.
Would it go onto your computerto find something?
So like a file, a folder onyour desktop and a picture of
you.
So, hey, go look at this folderand find these photos and post
(06:31):
it at 7 p.m.
tonight and put a fun cover.
Robby (06:33):
So so okay.
So let me let me give you avisual that's gonna allow you to
understand how the world works.
Not not our world, the AIworld.
Yep.
The internet is its own world.
Yes.
Okay, they live on theinternet, they can't come to the
world.
That can't come into the realworld, yeah.
Okay, so you're the only waythey can come into the real
world and have physical impactis when they're coded onto a
(06:56):
device that's connected to theinternet.
George (06:58):
Okay.
Does that make sense?
So pretty much you'd have to belogged on onto whatever tab,
let's call it, that's open onyour browser.
Does the tab have to be open?
Robby (07:07):
It can open stuff.
George (07:08):
Yeah, so we could go,
you could go say you got
favorites saved.
Robby (07:12):
Yeah, yeah.
George (07:12):
You could go and find go
to this wherever and find this.
Robby (07:16):
But it's it's got full
built-in memory.
So like it might the first timeit might struggle.
Yeah, like your history.
Oh, yeah, I know now.
Yeah, okay, yeah, no, no, Iknow that.
Now I I did that once and now Iknow how to do it.
Yeah, so you wouldn't useChrome or anything ever again.
Well, no, I I'm so close tomoving everything over.
Yeah, well.
George (07:31):
It's probably in 24
hours.
Yeah, of course.
Robby (07:33):
I'm so close to being
like, well, why am I gonna like
this seems silly to continueworking on on the older
platform, yeah.
George (07:40):
Yeah, it's like, why
would I not be able to do that?
Because it's funny, I wasthinking the other day, it's
like, what's uh Gemini?
Is that Google?
Yeah.
So I was thinking the otherday, because I've got um one of
those screens at home.
What are they called?
The Google Home.
Google Home, yeah.
Yeah, and it's in the kitchen,just literally it tells a time.
And the only thing I use itfor, honestly, is to set a
countdown timer for when I'msoft boiling eggs.
Five minutes and twentyseconds, everyone.
(08:01):
But is that your time?
Five minutes and twenty secondswill give you perfect soft yolk
eggs.
Robby (08:06):
Are they running come out
of the fridge?
George (08:08):
Yeah, out of the fridge.
Large eggs?
Large eggs.
Robby (08:10):
Five minutes and boiling
water?
George (08:12):
Drop them into boiling
water, five minutes, twenty
seconds.
Do you put them into cold waterafter it?
Straight away.
Robby (08:17):
Well, that's not long.
I do seven minutes.
George (08:18):
Do you?
Robby (08:19):
For soft.
I'm talking runny.
Soft, yeah.
Nah, mine's uh uh uh not runny,like like soft to the points
where they're just not runny.
George (08:26):
No, mine's runny.
So the the egg white is solid,and then the yolk is runny.
Five minutes, twenty seconds.
Robby (08:33):
Okay, no, no.
George (08:34):
Uh uh mine's soft.
Oh, okay.
No, I don't do that.
Yeah, I don't do that.
Robby (08:37):
Okay.
So anyway, that's pretty much20 seconds.
If you haven't learned anythingfrom 105 episodes now, you know
how to become if you everhaven't Georgia.
Figure it out.
You'd be like, cool, fiveminutes, 20 seconds, George.
I got you.
Just how he likes it.
George (08:50):
So that's all I use it
for.
And I was thinking the otherday, like, why the hell wouldn't
they integrate Gemini into thatso it actually has intelligent
and proper conversation?
No, I think it's funny enough,I got an email notification the
other day, and I think it's juststarting to integrate it now.
But for the longest time, I waslike, why wouldn't you do that?
Because you can ask it thingsnow and it's stupid.
Like it's it doesn't, itdoesn't respond like chat would,
(09:12):
for example.
You know, you can have a properconversation with chat, you
can't do that with Google Home,which to me was a bit silly.
Like you you've got the thingthere, use it, utilize it, let's
go.
So okay, that's cool.
So you would use that, it makesperfect sense for you to be
using that as your primarybrowser now and just running
everything through there becauseas you said, you could you
(09:32):
could go downstairs, you couldsay, say you got a meeting
downstairs, you could say, Okay,before I go, can you do this,
this, this, and this?
Go.
Robby (09:41):
And even if it takes it
an hour, it is a just a
disclaimer for everyonelistening, it's not as quick as
you would be.
Yes.
At the moment right now, yeah,yeah, it's going to be way
fucking quicker than youeventually.
George (09:53):
Yeah, but also let's
think of as you said, as you
said yesterday.
Robby (09:57):
I don't think people are
fathoming, it can see the
screen.
Yeah, because when I saw itmove.
Think about that.
It is it can see the screen,like it knows what it's looking
at, it knows what's in front ofit.
Yeah.
Was it moving the actual mouse?
It's got its own mouse.
Oh, that's cool.
Yeah, it doesn't touch yourmouse.
Um, and it's cool because itcan do handovers.
So if it gets to a point whereit's gonna say login, it can
(10:19):
turn around and be like, Can youlog in?
Can you log in?
I can't do that.
And you can be like, but likethis is where I think it's gonna
go.
So a couple things.
Wait, did uh did I answer yourquestion?
George (10:26):
Yeah, yeah.
But so it's and this is what Iasked you.
It's like a its own AI agent,then, isn't it?
Robby (10:30):
It's it is, it's the
agentic version in the browser,
built into the browser.
Yeah, that's it.
So it's like it can do basictasks for you.
Now, it still has to beprompted and triggered.
So the difference between an AIagent we build is we can have
it based on something happening.
Do you know what I mean?
So I can build an agent foryou, and that agent can respond
based on the email beingreceived, whereas this will only
(10:51):
respond based on you promptingit.
Yeah.
Make sense?
Yes.
Because every reaction iscaused by an action.
Yeah.
But this will only be caused byyou doing something.
So it sits in your browser, itdoes whatever you want.
So you can be like doingsomething, and then you can be
like, you know how uh youwouldn't use this much, but we
use this a lot.
And it's like you get stuck ina particular situation building
(11:13):
something out, and you can kindof screenshot it and take it to
chat and be like, hey, this iswhere I'm at, what's happening?
Now I can do that in thebrowser.
So I don't have to take I don'thave to go and come back and
like you know what I mean?
I can do it in the spot, I canbe like, what the fuck's going
on here?
And it'll tell me.
Or I can be like, Can you sortthis out and it'll take over the
screen?
So I tested it.
George (11:31):
And then you can go do
something else.
Robby (11:33):
You can go do something
else.
So I tested it before with ourweb developer.
I got him on um a Zoom call andI was like, let me show you my
screen and I'll show you thisthing.
He just came out, blah blahblah.
Show him.
He's like, What the fuck?
And I'm like, what's what's atask you normally do?
And he's like, he's like, let'sgo.
So we went into like a back endof a website, WordPress, and I
(11:54):
was like, Cool, uh, what'ssomething like what's a basic
task you do?
And he told me and I was like,Cool, can you go do this?
And the fucking thing did it.
And it went and did what hewould.
I I didn't even know how to dowhat it did.
George (12:03):
Yeah.
And you asked her to do it.
Robby (12:04):
Yeah, and it went and
updated the page title.
So it's now now it's like, hey,if you want to go and manage
your own website, you probablycan.
George (12:13):
Yeah, so I won't need to
pay someone to do that.
Robby (12:15):
That's what I'm saying.
And you can go and manage,like, update your own website.
If you want to change somewriting or add something in, you
can go be like, can you go addthis onto this page?
Yep.
Dude, I even said go duplicate.
Here's a here's the blog post.
Here's a Google Drive link fora blog post.
It need add it to the website,duplicate the pages they
currently have.
It went, duplicated the currentstyle, added the new blog post
(12:36):
in and posted it.
And I was like, we just added apage to a website.
Didn't need to do anything.
I didn't need to do anything.
Yeah.
I don't I don't know how to dothat myself.
Yes.
I used to have to give it to myteam.
I did it.
So now you're fired, guys.
Hope you're listening.
Yeah.
George (12:49):
So if you're listening,
this is uh this is your notice.
This is your notice.
Two weeks' notice, pack it up.
But technically as that sounds,yeah, though, but you're
looking at that aspect of whatthey do now, they're gonna start
to become very obsolete likethat.
Robby (13:01):
No, no, no, no, no,
they're not, they're not,
they're not, they're not.
This is where people aregetting it wrong, and we're
thinking like humans.
So this is what people's jobsare gonna become.
George (13:08):
It's agent.
Robby (13:10):
Yes, it's no longer the
doing the do.
Oh, I need to now go in andfucking blah blah blah blah.
It's like now you might have anoperation of 12 screens, and
you're like, cool, go do this,go do this, screen two, go do
this, screen three, screen four,screen five, screen six, and
you instruct them all, and nowall of a sudden your output is
(13:31):
12x.
Yeah, so it's gonna enhancewhat you're doing now because
you can you can do 12 multiplethings all at once, but you
know, separate tabs.
George (13:38):
I suppose it still does
to a degree, because if you had
before you had 10 people doingthat, now you can have three
people doing it.
Yeah, so to a degree, it doeshave a level of replacement, but
that so does any automation inbusiness as well.
Robby (13:53):
Look at all technology,
yeah.
That's all all uh farming andadvancing, like yeah, yeah.
If you think about agriculturaladvancements, it was like they
had a hundred people uh what'sseeding or whatever the I don't
know.
I don't know the first thingabout farming, you do.
But they had a hundred peopleseeding or watering or whatever,
and now it's like done by thisbig machine and one person
drives.
Do you go to the supermarket?
(14:13):
Never, sometimes.
George (14:15):
Yeah, okay.
Do you ever go to a checkoutchick?
Me?
Yeah.
Robby (14:18):
If I've got a lot of
stuff, yeah.
George (14:20):
If you have a lot, so
you still want to do it
yourself.
If I've got a lot, I've got awhat's a lot, like a trolley.
Robby (14:24):
Yeah.
George (14:25):
Yeah, okay.
So if you've got a trolley,okay.
Basket?
No.
Generally you do it yourself.
Most people these days willprobably prefer to do it
themselves than to get go to aperson.
And like you think back in theday, people didn't know any of
that.
Yeah.
You know, people like, no, no,person, person, person.
And now everyone's used to it.
They used to people used tocrack it saying I don't want to
do it myself.
I'm paying coals to do itmyself now, you know, or bullies
(14:48):
or whatever it is.
Robby (14:48):
Technology advancements.
George (14:49):
It's the same thing now.
Robby (14:50):
Yeah, exact same thing.
It's very much the same thing.
There used to be milkmen.
That was a job once.
You were a milkman and you hadto deliver milk to everyone's
house.
Yeah.
Who's a milkman now?
Do you know anyone that's amilkman?
You know one.
One looks just one.
Do you know one milkman?
If you're listening to this andyou know a milkman, send me a
DM.
George (15:09):
Yeah.
Send me a DM and send and sendme some milk.
Robby (15:11):
And um, we're gonna be
out of milk, bring us some to
the office.
We're gonna sign up to a milksubscription.
Um bring but bring us a cow.
But that is that is the uhevolution of things.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
And I think people haven'tquite gathered that oh, okay,
like the same way.
What's something that was likesuper difficult?
(15:34):
Because now it's like the superdifficult things can become
easy.
From a tech particular gettingon the internet.
So getting on the internet inthe early 90s was like you had
to be a fucking tech wizard toget on the internet.
No, but that was like that waslate 90s, early 2000s.
Yeah, yeah.
I think like early 90s.
I think when like Jeff Bezosgot into Amazon like that early,
and it's like um that's aright, no.
(15:56):
You had to really, reallyunderstand aspects of technology
that most people didn't.
Yeah, now this is making thatless valid.
Like now, all of a sudden, likeif you can write, you can
instruct some you can instructthe AI agent to go and change
something on your website.
George (16:15):
Why do you think they
haven't got it on PC?
I thought that's a bit odd,don't you?
Robby (16:21):
Yeah, but like there's
two types of people people who
use PCs and normal people.
George (16:26):
Right?
People that and people thatorder peppermint chock tops.
Yeah, and and then and thenpeople No, but that's still like
to me, you aren't you I don'tknow, is it 5050 PC and Mac?
I I I'm sure they are maybecoming up with that.
Robby (16:41):
That's true.
That'd have to.
Yeah.
George (16:42):
That'd have to
eventually.
They're the two main operatingsystems in the world, PC and
Mac.
But I yeah, like because if ithad it, I'd I'd probably use it
now.
I'd have it.
I would have downloaded italready.
I was I was um because I useOutlook for my emails, but then
I would probably open Outlook onmy browser as well if it can
(17:03):
help me do certain things.
Yeah, well, say any email fromthese people or from this
person, just either But it'sit's not gonna work by itself.
Oh, it won't you have to ask iteach time?
Robby (17:13):
Yeah, it's like chat GPT.
George (17:14):
Okay, so I can't so it's
not an agent like what you were
saying, where it can you canprogram it to do that task all
the time throughout the day.
No, okay, cool.
Robby (17:22):
No, we can build those
agents, yeah, but that has to be
based on a reaction.
So that has to be triggeredevery time something happens.
Yes.
So it's be like, cool, whenevery time we get an email, I
want you to read it.
And if it's from this person, Iwant you to reply.
Or if it's from these fivepeople, don't reply, everyone
else reply.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
Yeah.
Robby (17:39):
You know what I mean?
Things like that, you know, orif it's and you can teach it
like that, but that's not theversion that's built into the
browser.
George (17:46):
Yeah, okay.
Robby (17:47):
The version that's built
into the browser is like an
assistant who's there, you'relike, hey, do this.
George (17:50):
Yep.
Robby (17:51):
You know what I mean?
Whereas the other agenticversion, which which operates in
a similar manner, but just ison a different system, so you
you can build it based on anaction.
George (18:03):
Yeah, so the other day,
because you got it to you said,
Hey, go onto George's Facebookuh Instagram page or something
and like all these photos.
Robby (18:10):
Yeah, so go onto
Instagram and just keep liking
every go like 20 photos.
Yeah.
It's like this is gonna be alengthy task.
And I'm like, do it.
George (18:18):
Why then my question is
why didn't you like them
already?
Robby (18:23):
That's a great question.
Probably because the PascalInstagram page was uh missing
for 60 days.
I was crying the whole time.
Hey, by the way, shout outshout out to those people who
were able to get it back.
That's a great contact.
I think you should share themwith me because that's a quite a
unique I don't know if they didthe job in the end.
Oh, what?
George (18:40):
Yeah, I don't know.
I think it was a coincidence.
Robby (18:43):
Oh what?
Yeah, I think oh so you don'treckon it was them?
George (18:47):
No, I don't.
Then it was me.
It could have been, it couldhave been you.
So if so many cases if youraccount gets hacked, make sure
you contact Robbie.
Give Robbie a buzz, call me,ridiculous.
Yeah, that's what we specializein.
Yeah, so for those of you thatdon't know, my Instagram
account, the Pascon one, um overa thousand photos.
(19:08):
I genuinely thought I thought,oh, they must have a way.
Like they must have look, allthey did when I contacted them
was literally do what you did.
Yeah, absolutely.
The only difference was hegoes, when you're speaking to
them, be overly nice.
I am not just not nice, notjust hey, thank you.
Overly nice, like Love Heart,every fucking message they say.
Thank you so much.
You're amazing.
Have a wonderful day.
(19:28):
But he reckons they've testedthousands upon thousands of
different interactions with thewith the meta crew, but it's
that's unblunt ones.
Yeah, but he goes, it wasoverwhelming the result they got
when they were overly nice, asopposed to Yeah, but that's
probably applicable in all.
Robby (19:44):
It could very well be.
Yeah, yeah, you're not gonnaget more of what you want if
you're nicer to the people.
George (19:48):
But think about when
people contact Meta, generally
speaking, hey, where the fuck'smy page?
Like, what are you fuckersdoing?
Can you sort this shit out?
Robby (19:55):
So I had an issue with my
page for two years.
Wow.
Two years that's a long time.
I was convinced that like itwas gone.
I was gonna start a new page.
Yeah, it was I was actuallyvery close.
But I didn't have ownershipaccess.
Oh, remember partial access.
Yes, I remember that.
And every now and again I wouldgo to give someone access and I
couldn't, and I would getpissed off.
Yeah.
So I'd go go back at them likeevery three months.
(20:17):
And uh one day I just got agirl and I was having a bad day,
and I was going off at her, andshe's like, I'm gonna fix this
for you.
And I was like, Everyonefucking says they're gonna fix
it, blah, blah, blah.
Um, you know what I mean?
And then she fixed it.
And then we And I was like,Hey, can I take you out to
dinner?
No.
What's your name?
What's your name?
Couldn't even tell you my name.
Um, but I was so because theyall say the same thing.
(20:41):
It's like they've Yeah, it wasreally and I'm like, hey, like
this.
I've spoken to like 25 of youat this point.
Yeah, and you've asked the samequestion extract.
And you all ask the samequestion, and I tell you, and
then you give me back the sameexcuse at the plant and then you
close the case, and then youknow very frustrating because I
started doing that, and that'sall he was directing me to do.
Yeah, and I was just doing thatover and over and over, and I I
I got it back.
George (21:00):
Yeah.
So uh for us, it was it's beendown for about it was down for
about two months where just noaccess, they just shut it down
all of a sudden, and it wasrandom, random, random, random.
I just literally went to log onone night and said, doesn't you
you've breached our communitystandards or something like
that.
And last two nights ago, I gota notification again on email
saying, Hey, we've um unlockedyour page, you can log in again.
(21:22):
Thank we made a mistake afterfurther review.
We made a mistake.
We apologize for theinconvenience, but trying to
keep our community safe.
Obviously, posting too manysick houses that we're building.
Yeah, it's like yeah, slow downtoo much.
Slow down.
But yeah, it got me thinking aswell.
Like I was very close to justgoing, fuck it, let's start
again.
So it's still a new page.
So 20 over, I think we had23,000, 24,000 followers, over a
(21:44):
thousand posts.
And I was just like, all right,cool.
Part of me was like, All right,how cool would it be to do it
again and actually build it upbut quicker?
And then the other part was melike, fuck, can't be bothered.
Like just let's just go.
But it also is a lesson foreveryone, like not to be
omnipresent.
Uh sorry, not to be what's theopposite?
Single channel focused, yeah,single channel focused, exactly.
(22:04):
Like, imagine how I only everpost it on Instagram.
That's it.
Because I couldn't be botheredbecause Facebook doesn't give me
much, or I don't get much onFacebook.
Facebook doesn't give anyonemuch.
I know, but it's free.
That's what I said.
Yeah, like it costs nothing.
Robby (22:17):
You're getting a bad
return on your investment.
Yeah, exactly.
George (22:20):
Pay.
Yeah.
I just I actually just paidnow.
I don't know if it's gonna makeany difference, but I got um
meta verified on both of theaccounts.
So Facebook and Instagram.
Um, not from a perspective ofgetting more likes or anything,
I just think it protects theaccount a little bit more when
they see that you're verified.
And we spend quite a bit ofmoney on ads, like yeah.
Speaker 3 (22:39):
I don't think they
make the connection though.
George (22:41):
Really?
Because a guy I was speaking tosaid that because you're paying
for ads and you've got a trackhistory of spending, you know, a
couple hundred thousanddollars, he goes, I'll
prioritize you a little bitmore.
Oh, really?
That's what he said.
Now, whether that's true ornot, I don't know.
Interesting.
Yeah, so we got it back, whichwas great, good result.
But you know, if you do havesocial media accounts, which
everyone in business these daysdoes.
(23:02):
You did an event, we did anevent at our last one at Built
Mastery, and I think you asked afew people, there's a few
people who didn't have websites,there was a few people who
weren't on social media as well.
Robby (23:11):
There's a couple of
people who had in the room any
platforms either.
George (23:14):
Uh any which?
AI.
Oh, that's what it was.
That's what I was a bitsurprised at.
Robby (23:17):
Yeah, and they were like,
no, I've never used it.
And I'm like, dude, yeah,listen to me.
It's like saying you're ridingyour horse to work.
Your life's going to berattled.
Um, yeah.
I think people are grosslyunderestimating how full on this
is.
George (23:34):
Yeah, I agree.
And I tell you why, why do youthink that is?
Why do I think that peoplehaven't said like how come it's
not headlining news?
How come people aren't goingout tonight and talking about it
when they get home?
Like, why do you think peopledon't know what you knew?
Robby (23:49):
Even when chat GPT came
out, people went.
Yeah, but why do you think thatis?
And now they're like, oh mygod, it's my therapist and blah
blah blah.
And it's like it's just anagreeable, it's agreeable.
George (23:59):
Yeah, you still use it
wrong.
Robby (24:00):
Yeah.
Um, but yeah, it's now gone tothe next level.
It's gone from So think this.
The internet was initially aplace you could go and type and
get some information.
Then it turned into I couldtype and they would type back.
And it was like, whoa, likethis thing's replying.
Now it's like I can sit there,hey, go do this.
(24:21):
And it'll sit there.
Like, think about that.
And then soon it's gonna belike, hey, come in.
Come in, yeah.
Bring in the bots, bring in thebots, send set up all the
cameras.
Yeah, you sit there.
Did you turn the alarm off whenyou left?
Go get me my lunch.
That's gonna be great.
That's pump.
And then yeah, the bots angryat you in it since they're
(24:41):
poisoning your lunch.
Oh shit.
Yeah, yeah.
Take it too far.
George (24:44):
I just relax.
Let's relax.
But back to my question.
Why do you think it is?
Why do you think people aren'tdoing it?
Why do you think people aren'tas pumped right now about the um
the search engine?
Robby (24:57):
The browser.
I I think most people have no.
I I can almost guaranteeeveryone listening to this right
now, this would be the firsttime they're hearing about it.
Yeah, oh, without a doubt.
But you're getting to hearabout it because you follow us.
That's right.
George (25:08):
Imagine what else we
could teach you.
Robby (25:09):
Yeah.
Like this is uh this is Iposted about chat DPT six weeks
after I came out, and I wasfucking early.
I showed you this 11 hoursafter I came out.
After I got dropped.
I was like, I saw it and I waslike, I'll check it out.
Like, let me just have a quicklook.
And I was like, whoa.
And I was blown away.
George (25:30):
Yeah.
Does Josh uh have a Macdownstairs?
Oh no.
Yeah.
Robby (25:36):
He's gonna work um in the
main age.
Yeah, told him get a shovel, soum you know, speaking on that I
think we I think we're we'refacing a serious problem.
In society?
Or you and society How old isyour youngest employee?
(25:58):
Uh 27, 28?
George (26:02):
Okay, so late 20s.
Oh no, younger.
Yeah, 27.
Robby (26:08):
Okay.
I don't know.
If I look at this has been myexperience.
I I've heard other people saysimilar things, but I feel like
and I don't know if this is agenerations thing, I don't know
if this is an AI thing, but Ifeel like people lack and and
this is gonna get worse, lackthe ability to actually do the
(26:32):
do.
But then it's like I I almostwant to turn around and say,
Well, like, do I need to knowhow to fix a tractor?
I don't.
You know what I mean?
And people probably back in theday, you said, you don't know
how to fix a tractor.
Just for the record, I probablydo.
I used to be a mechanic, buteveryone else, you know, like um
Do you get what I'm saying?
And it's like, are we thinkinglike that?
Are we thinking that type ofold school?
I'll give you an example.
(26:53):
I spoke to someone today andthey had a they hit a wall with
an they're trying to dosomething on an account, and
they're like, Oh, it's notworking.
And I've I've I've taught themthis many times, and I'm like,
hey, when something doesn'twork, what do we do?
We isolate the problem.
Okay, like let's isolate theproblem.
Okay, cool.
This account is not being addedon this.
Well, let's work out is it theaccount, is it the browser?
(27:13):
Like, what are the all thevariables?
And let's test them one by oneto work out what the problem is.
Because then you can work out,oh fuck, it doesn't work on this
browser.
Oh, it's the client's account,oh, it's the email we were
trying, oh, it's the fuckingplatform is currently doing it
with everyone.
Whatever it is, we can work outwhat it is.
Oh, it's this time or whatever.
We can work out what it is ifwe isolate each variable.
(27:34):
They don't know how to do thatanymore.
Like they don't know how tothink a problem, they don't have
problem solve.
But am I thinking old schooland be like, we don't have to
problem solve anymore, we've gotAI.
Yeah, true.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, we've we've got AI.
What do I need to problemsolve?
The AI can do it for me.
George (27:51):
In the last um, I'm
gonna call it month, I've
replaced two tires on a car.
Yeah.
On an actual vehicle.
Now, my car uh and I had apuncture, and I fixed the
puncture myself.
So I pulled the car off, pulledthe tire off, fixed it, put the
back, put it back on.
And then the other day, one ofmy employees on their car had
the same thing happen, which isactually my car anyway, but had
(28:12):
it happen there, and we had totake a change the tire there.
And it's funny because mybrother-in-law is the type that
will never change your tire.
Not because of not knowing howto, he'd be like, the first
thing he would think would belike, I'm just gonna call RACV.
They can come, jack up the tar,the the car, change the tire,
move on with my life.
Whereas my first trainerthought was, okay, let's let's
pull the jack out, change thetire and move on, rather than
(28:35):
calling someone else.
So I think it's also it comesdown to the the programming and
how people have have sort ofgrown up and how they're
trained.
And I think people, as from ahabitual perspective, they focus
on what they're doing andthat's it.
And then everything outside ofthat, they'll catch on
eventually, if at all.
Robby (28:53):
Yeah, but like, okay.
George (28:55):
Because that's why I
asked you the question.
Why do you think people don'tdo it?
Like, say for I'm just gonna goback to construction.
You're looking at theirbuilders are on site, they're
busy, they're running around allday, they're calling people.
Yeah, they'll send some emails,they'll hear about this.
They might go and chat to go,what's the square meter of how
much does this cost a squaremeter?
That's probably the extent ofthem using it, if using it at
(29:17):
all.
Then for them to de dig indeeper, I feel like it's oh, I
have to learn how to do that.
Oh God.
You know, it's just likeanother task for them to do.
Even though by investing halfan hour, it'll probably save
them tens of hours in work.
I feel that people are reallyhesitant to go and do something
new.
And that's why they don't catchon early enough.
(29:38):
And then eventually, when itbecomes the norm, like every you
saw when we first started doingevents and we put our hands up.
I remember the first time youmentioned Chat GPT at an event,
there was six to ten hands thatwent up in a room full of 80 to
100 people.
Now you go, and it was one ortwo that haven't got their hand
up, yeah, you know, and that'sonly A year and a half, two
(30:01):
years later.
It's and I feel that that'swhere this browser is gonna be
also the search engine's gonnabe, as far as that is concerned.
Like everyone's gonna say, Oh,do you use Google Chrome?
Why the fuck would you usethat?
Unless Google Chrome then hasGemini built into it.
Do you want me to do I want togive you a quick slap in the
face?
Robby (30:16):
Yeah, let's go for it.
Fuck, that's fucked.
That's fuck.
That's fuck.
Turn three in less than amonth.
That's oh sorry, sorry, justover a month.
That's silly.
Yeah, and the next month.
That's silly.
Yeah, the time's flying.
Line.
Flying.
Um yeah, but so to go back towhat I was saying, do you think
(30:41):
it's a problem?
Because I haven't worked out ifit's a problem yet or not.
What you think what's aproblem, sorry?
The whole dependency on tech.
Like in the sense of like, hey,yeah, I've mentioned this
before.
I do write emails.
Do you write emails?
George (30:57):
Yeah, fucking on every
day.
Robby (30:58):
Yeah, but like, do you
write them?
George (30:59):
As in Yeah.
Yeah, every day.
Robby (31:01):
Okay, yeah.
I just like if I'm gonna send aquick email, I just write it.
Yeah.
If I ask certain people on ourteam to send an email, I'll be
like, hey, email so and so aboutthis.
And they'll go into chat and belike, can you write an email?
And it's like, hey, write thefucking email.
Like, do you know what I mean?
Like, you you that's you're notbeing quicker by doing that.
Yeah.
You might sound a little bitbetter, but you're gonna sound
(31:23):
less, not less you.
George (31:25):
Well, here's the thing,
yeah.
That's the thing now, right?
People, I can you can tell whenemails are generated by chat
GPT.
Robby (31:31):
Yeah, because people are
using words that don't know how
to pronounce.
George (31:34):
That's right.
But also it's like the way itstructures the email with lines
and hyphens and bold writinghere and there and all that sort
of shit.
You go, okay, cool.
That was just the chatresponse.
So I think you're actuallygetting a little bit more
credibility when you handactually write an email yourself
these days.
But aside from that, I'm big onefficiency, but yes, I think
there is I think that's aproblem.
(31:54):
What you see, yes, I do.
I think you need to have alevel of practicality about how
you operate, and I think that'llbe advantageous to you in the
future.
But is it being able to notnecessarily doing it, just being
able to, but is it what that'swhat I'm saying to you?
Robby (32:07):
Because that's like
fails, yeah.
But that's like saying now, doyou if you were in a okay?
George (32:14):
If my car broke down, I
shouldn't learn I should know
how to ride a horse.
Robby (32:19):
Yes, that aspect, like
okay, cool.
Now, so if all cars juststopped, like do you don't know
how to ride a horse?
I'll figure it out.
I do.
George (32:26):
You see, the thing is I
for myself, uh knowing how my
brain works, I'd be like, allright, let's fucking ride a
horse.
Whereas most other people wouldbe like, no, no, we can't ride
that.
I said, Well, fucking we usedto, I'm sure we can figure it
out right now if we have to ridea horse.
So there's probably needs to bea level of I don't know what
the word is.
Robby (32:46):
I think we're losing that
thing though.
George (32:48):
Yes, that's what I mean.
I think we're losing it 100%because things are just there
now.
And so I said it the other day.
Why do I need to learn my timestable?
Why do kids need to learn theirtimes table?
You know, everyone zerobenefit.
Everyone carries a calculatorin their hand in their pocket.
Yeah.
Everyone.
You don't need to learn yourtimes tables, you don't need to
learn a lot of history stuff.
(33:08):
Okay.
Who the who was the the 14thPrime Minister of Australia?
Do you know what I mean?
There you go.
You can find that out reallyquickly.
It's there's a lot of thingsthat because of this device that
we don't need to know or learn,or is not useful to us to sit
there and study.
And okay, if you don't know whothe 14th Prime Minister was,
(33:32):
well, you're gonna get a fail inyour history exam and now
you're dumb and you're not gonnago to uni.
Robby (33:38):
Yeah, but like so, okay,
so we don't we know we don't
need that now.
Yeah.
But the next thing becomeslike, how much do we not need?
Yeah.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, like how far does thishow far does it go?
Because like stuck, okay, cool.
Hey, we can still, you and I,like we can still do some basic
math.
Yeah, you can't.
Like if I sit there sayingseven plus four, you don't sit
(33:58):
there saying, one sec, sevenplus four, then you don't need a
calculator.
Now, if I tell you like a bignumber, okay, that's fine.
But like, I think it'll get tothe point where kids might sit
there and be like, I don't knowwhat seven plus four is.
Let me you know what I mean?
Let me check it out.
Because I haven't worked outhow to manually do it.
George (34:14):
I saw a team, uh I
actually think it was on social
media, and they were showingsome kid, they they called two
kids in and said, you know, itwas an American show.
They're like, Who was tell meabout the the Fifth Amendment in
the Constitution and all thatsort of stuff?
And the kids just look at himand say, I don't know, is that
something about freedom or someshit like that?
And he's like, Yeah, cool,you've answered the question,
thanks.
(34:35):
And then he goes and gets hisdaughter, who's homeschooled,
and he's goes, Tell me about theFifth Amendment.
And she's like, Oh, it's aboutthis, this, this, and this.
And then she goes, No, no, no,don't tell me what it is, tell
me why we need it.
And she answered the question,it was just a young kid, and she
answered the question in aintel like what you were just
saying, in an intelligent way,in a practical way, in the
reason of knowing what it is andwhat it's about and all that
sort of shit.
(34:55):
And those kids that are taughtthe traditional way or
distracted by their phones orjust get everything from the
phone couldn't answer orunderstand the question, whereas
you had someone else who wastaught in a different way.
Robby (35:08):
Yeah, who could.
We're losing the ability tocritically think.
Yes, and I think that'simportant, especially but but
but is it that's what that's myargument.
Not an argument, my I don'tknow the answer yet.
Because like I do think itsounds important, like it seems
to me.
That's what I mean.
Like hey man, if you don't havethat and I have that, I'm gonna
crush you.
Yeah, I think from a level ofindo innovation, did they think
(35:30):
the same thing 50 years ago andthink if you can't fix the cars
and I can, I'm gonna crush you.
And it's like, well, you didn'tbecause tech made that thing uh
less valuable.
George (35:40):
Okay, but uh it'd be
interesting to ask Elon that
question.
Call him, call him.
Yeah, I will.
After the podcast, I will.
But do you know what I mean?
Because he he's a criticalthinker, yeah.
Yeah.
It'd be interesting to asksomeone who is a critical
thinker, or would he then say,no, no, well, I'm gonna stop
critical thinking now becauseI've got this.
(36:01):
It thinks 50,000 times fasterthan me and more critical than
me.
But the questions he asks itwould be a lot more intelligent
than the person that's alwaysreliant on this.
You know, and again, I sawanother post the other day.
It's like, we're the lastgeneration that grew up in a
time before technology and thensaw the technology come in and
evolve to what it is today.
We're gonna be that we are thatlast generation.
(36:23):
We're like that.
What a time.
What a time to be like howfucking how's the timing on
that?
Man, we could we we won thelottery there.
Or was it millennials?
I think it's millennials.
I don't know how the fuckinggenerations work, but my
generation, your generation, wegrew up with analog TVs, like
you used to go outside, ride abike, used to come home when it
was dark outside.
(36:44):
That's how you knew the time tocome home.
There was no cell phones, yourparents didn't know where you
were, or whatever it was.
Like I used to, I remember Iused to ride my bike from Mount
Wavely to sorry, from Burwood toMount Waverley, or Billwood
East to Mount Waverley to see myfriends.
And you had to get back in.
Robby (36:58):
There was no way, no
case.
George (36:59):
Yeah, just had my had my
watch.
You had a watch.
I'm like, okay, cool.
Or I'd go, hey, let me can Icall your mum, can I call my my
mum on the house phone and onthe landline?
So I'd go, hey, I'm just atJohn's house.
We're just gonna chill out herefor a bit.
I'll be back before dinner.
Robby (37:12):
And you had to memorize
the phone number.
George (37:13):
Yeah, 98038113.
Robby (37:16):
Call, call someone.
They don't live there anymore,so I heard you uh I heard your
mother made some turmoil.
George (37:22):
You you could have heard
it or you could have eaten it.
So which which might I've onlyheard it at this point.
Um but I will have some.
It's in the fridge.
Yeah, hey, it's better thanthat place we went down the
road, by the way.
Uh E.
That's that's that's offensiveto compare the two, I think.
Robby (37:36):
Oh shit.
That's good.
Should have should have got mysister working here earlier.
But yeah, yes, yes, um, butyeah, that's that's my my
dilemma.
I think it's a valid.
I'm seeing it with team membersnow, and I'm like, hey man,
like you should you need to.
George (37:51):
I'm gonna say yes, man.
I'm gonna I'm gonna say I'mhoping I'm not being biased
because that's what I'm not.
Robby (37:56):
Well, that's what I'm
saying in the sense of like, did
they say yes back then?
But and think like how are theybetter by not?
How are they better byleveraging that?
It's not, it's not, it's likeit's irrelevant, it becomes
irrelevant.
It's like you're not better forit because the thinking process
has become so advanced thateven though you know how to
think, it doesn't matter becausewe all depend on this thing
(38:17):
that thinks way better thananyone.
George (38:18):
Yeah, however, way
better, sorry.
However, you're the boss, hey?
Robby (38:22):
You're the boss for now,
until you're not, until it can
observe everything, until all ofa sudden But then won't you
then use that tool at its atanother level as well compared
to all everyone else?
George (38:34):
Yes, yes, but that's
what I'm saying.
Robby (38:39):
No, no, you're not gonna
become stagnant, but it is like
I'm saying you as a criticalthinker.
Okay, so let me I'll put it toyou this way: think about the uh
agricultural, what's it called?
The uh industrial revolution.
Think about the industrialrevolution, okay?
So for those, if you don't knowwhat the industrial revolution
is, it was when machinery cameinto play, right?
So everyone, 95% of jobs werein agriculture, in farming.
(39:00):
And it's like everyone wasworking in that industry because
the biggest thing for humanswas we just need to make sure we
can keep eating.
We need to make sure thateveryone's fed and this is all,
and then it's like all of asudden machines came in and it
wiped out all the people thatwere doing that job.
Now, if this was 1800 and/orwhenever, I don't know what the
time frame is.
(39:20):
It's I think it's in the 1800s.
Uh before the IndustrialRevolution, it would have been
massively beneficial for you tobe bigger, stronger.
You would have a massive up.
Like you would have a hugeupside.
Yeah, big to be big and strong,yeah, and able to work.
And all of a sudden, now youcan advance further than I can.
(39:41):
The industrial revolutionleveled out that playing field.
Now it doesn't matter if you'retall, short, fat, skinny.
I can be fat and disabled andstuck in a chair all day.
And like, look at some of thesmartest people in those, like
Stephen Hawking, for example,right?
Genius like mentality couldn'tmove, but could think because
that was the next stage.
(40:02):
Now, this is gonna level outthe thinking field in the sense
of how intelligent you are isgonna get heavily leveled out.
George (40:10):
It's gonna get
irrelevant.
Robby (40:11):
Yeah, because all of a
sudden it's like, oh, like,
okay, so so I'm this smart.
And for those uh listening tothis, like let's just say I'm at
level one and you're at levelthree, and it's like you have a
huge advantage over me.
But when AI is at level 4,000And every day it's getting
smarter, and it's irrelevant,every day it's going up by 100.
Whether I'm one and you'rethree, it doesn't even make a
(40:33):
difference because this thing iswell beyond all of us.
Yeah.
unknown (40:36):
Yeah.
Robby (40:37):
It's like it's like you
can't, if you're a faster runner
than me, none of us can outruna car.
George (40:41):
Yeah.
unknown (40:41):
Yeah.
George (40:42):
And it's also say, say
you go back to your industrial
revolution.
What if someone sat there andsaid, Yeah, but what if all the
machines break down one day?
Robby (40:49):
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah, and then there would havebeen people saying that's in
there, like, nah, it's stillgood to be able to.
George (40:53):
We need to be able to do
this.
Robby (40:54):
It doesn't matter.
George (40:55):
It doesn't matter now.
If the machines break down,we're all fucked.
And then you're gonna call meup because I'm the biggest,
strongest, baddest guy in the fin the field.
Yes, picking corn.
Yeah.
unknown (41:05):
Yeah.
Robby (41:06):
Do you get do you get
what I'm saying though?
Like in the sense of therewould have still been the person
saying, oh no, no, but we stillneed the skill that we
originally had.
That I'm just playing the otherside of the argument.
I still believe the ability tocritically think is gonna be the
thing that determines yoursurvival or not for now.
You know what I mean?
You want to stay away fromdanger, you want to be able to
problem solve.
Yes.
For now.
But is that going to becomecompletely irrelevant as AI
(41:30):
starts to do everything for us?
Like you saw yesterday, justsent you a text message.
Speaker 1 (41:33):
Yeah.
Robby (41:34):
You know, now I had to
tell it what to say, but who's
to say in the future it won't beso fast that it consumes all
the history and all the notes ofeverything between them?
It's like, cool, I goteverything on these guys.
Yeah.
Because I just did a quickGoogle search, took all their
transcripts from every singlepodcast episode, and I've got
Robbie's voice down pan.
I'm actually gonna call Georgeand pretend I'm Robbie, he's
gonna have no idea.
George (41:54):
I'll be so pumped in
that day.
It'll be great.
Especially when he startsswearing at me or she or it.
Robby (42:02):
Yeah.
Like we we are not ready forwhat's coming.
I'm telling you right now, likestill, still, till this moment
now, we're all thinking like, ohyeah, I'm AI, I'm this, I'm
that.
Tell people like that.
Tell me, I love using AI, man.
We want to get on the AIbandwagon.
Still grossly underestimated.
George (42:24):
Yeah, it's funny because
I'm finding a lot more,
especially in your presentationsat our events, I'm finding a
lot more people are resonatingwith the things that you're
talking about now.
Have you noticed that?
Yeah, I feel like you'regetting a lot more engagement
and a lot more people wanting toget on board with a lot of the
stuff that you're doing.
Robby (42:39):
Yeah, I think the AI
thing is that's what I mean, is
a big part of it.
That I think also I think I'veI've bettered the presentation.
Oh, without a doubt.
George (42:46):
Uh yeah, you get better
by it by default.
Robby (42:48):
Yeah, just by repetition.
Um, but yeah, man, that's myand then it's like, do we need
because it because I won't lie,it pisses me off.
When I sit there and say, whatdo we do here?
And they're like, I don't know,and then they try and type it
into chat straight away.
And I'm like, hey, like justfucking think for a moment.
George (43:04):
Like give it a crack.
Robby (43:05):
Yeah, like just it I'm
cool, I'm cool.
If we're gonna get the answerlike that, that's great.
But like every little thing,you know what I mean?
Uh email error.
Hey, chat, it said email error.
And it's like, hey, it saidemail error because you fucking
typed the email wrong.
Like, look at the email.
George (43:21):
Yeah, that's it.
You know what I mean?
Like, that's right.
Robby (43:24):
That's my I was playing
um, I bought a Nintendo Switch,
you know.
Totally run and bought aNintendo Switch.
Bought a Nintendo Switch too.
I was playing Super Mario.
George (43:32):
Like it?
Robby (43:33):
I was fucking great.
Mario Super Mario.
Yeah, the old one though.
The old one?
Yeah, yeah.
I was playing the old one.
George (43:40):
You bought the latest
game to play the oldest game.
Robby (43:43):
It comes with it, it's a
fucking great game.
I know, I got it too.
And um, I was there playingSuper Mario.
Oh, how good.
The nostalgia.
Oh, it's fucking the even themusic.
Yeah, I got stuck on a stage.
Chad fixed the pass this levelfor me.
So, like, I'm like, I got stuckon the stage, and then I'm
like, how do I um and you knowhow there's like secret doors
(44:04):
and all this jazz?
And I'm like, I couldn't workit out.
So I messaged someone and Isaid, Hey, how did you pass this
stage?
And they sent me a YouTubelink, and I watched the YouTube
video and it showed me and Iwent and did it.
Yeah, and then I thought, dude,like that wasn't available when
this game came out.
George (44:20):
How funny, I'll do that
too.
I've done that before.
On I was playing, I startedplaying some uh Zelda, like I
don't know.
Robby (44:29):
The most recent one?
George (44:30):
Oh, the one that's on
Switch, whatever the one that
is, one of them.
It was just my one of my son'sgames.
I was just bored by kind ofstuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I started playing it andthen I got to some level and I
couldn't figure it out.
Robby (44:41):
Yeah, and then I
literally just went on YouTube
and typed it in and like Andthen it shows you, and then
you're like, but then the thingbecomes like, hey, how did you
work it out initially?
George (44:50):
Back in the day.
Like that it was like trialerror, right?
Robby (44:53):
It was like I'm just
gonna keep running around, then
I'll go back and I'll come backand I'll go back and I'll just
fucking yeah, until I work outwhat thing I needed, what I had
to pick up, or whatever it was.
George (45:01):
You ever get real pissed
off that you had to turn it
off?
Me because you couldn't figureit out.
Story of my life, yeah.
So I used to I used to get soshitty sometimes, I couldn't
figure it out, and then I'd turnit off and go away, and then I
wouldn't play it for days andthen come back and pass it the
first time.
Yeah, but now we've got thatthing where we're like, okay,
cool, let me go.
Robby (45:17):
Yeah, but it's like and
it's like, is that a bad thing
though?
Is it like I don't know, I Idon't know if it's a bad thing.
Do I think you'll get more outof it by critically thinking?
Yes, but is that gonna becomesomething that's completely
irrelevant, just like yourability to run super fast?
George (45:34):
I'd say from the
perspective of I'm gonna say
yes, it is.
I'll tell you why, but like itbeing a disad a disadvantage to
you.
To to do to do that, yeah, forpeople like to always be reliant
on on a chat.
Because it's not always, Imean, is it literally gonna get
to the point where you've got itplugged into your ear 24-7?
(45:56):
Of course it's gonna get to thepoint.
Yeah, so then maybe it's not.
Because like I'm saying fromyourself, no, no, but I'm just
saying from today, right?
If you're young, you're you'rethe younger employees are just
like, oh, it says email error.
Why is it saying email error?
Because you put three attsafter the fucking.
Robby (46:13):
Because you didn't look
at what you typed.
Yeah, exactly.
Open your eyes.
George (46:16):
Yeah, um, but then in
the real world, like say we go
to your coffee, like me, we'regoing for coffee, and there's a
problem with the table becauseit's out of balance.
All right, that's the the thingmoves, and everyone goes out
onto chat.
Like, why is this coffee tablebump moving?
I said, Yeah, what the fuck?
Just put a napkin under one ofthe legs so it stops bouncing,
or whatever you do.
Do you know what I mean?
(46:36):
Is that I feel like is okay.
Robby (46:39):
Is that a bad thing?
Let me give you anotherexample.
Okay, that's uh that might berelative.
When you something happens to abody part, you get a headache,
you feel some type of sickness.
What do you do now?
George (46:50):
Yeah, take band at all,
go to bed.
Robby (46:52):
Huh?
George (46:54):
It's not a pain, it's
something I I don't Doctor
Google, but yeah, what you say.
What do you do?
Uh I don't know.
Probably just depends what thepain is.
Robby (47:02):
Like, what do you reckon
your doctor does?
You reckon?
You don't reckon?
You reckon just Googles it?
I reckon they're chat GPT.
George (47:10):
I'm gonna call up my
mate and be very upset.
Robby (47:12):
Call him, call him now.
George (47:13):
I'm gonna be very upset
if he just goes, if people okay
patients come in and see him andsay, Hey doc, I've got a weird
rash.
It's like, oh interesting.
Okay, yes, just take this crazyreplies.
Robby (47:24):
Where the doc's on chat
GPT and the guy's like, I
fucking hope he's paying forpremium.
Um, I'll be upset.
I've got to call my mate.
No, no, but like, so okay, taketake the doctor aspect out of
it.
Yeah, what do most people do?
George (47:37):
Yeah, they'll go on Dr.
Do Dr.
Google and try to figure outthey got is that person?
Robby (47:42):
Yeah.
Which which is but I think it'smore accurate now.
Like I think if you jump ontoGoogle or chat.
George (47:49):
Oh, dude, remember when
we went to the States and I
literally my hernia came out ofthe States.
Yeah.
Like that's when I kind of feltit, like I had that bump of the
state.
And you Googled it.
I Googled it.
Ah, there you go.
So there you go.
Robby (47:59):
So it was exactly because
it was like, I've got this
weird bump underneath, and it'slike, oh, so when you get
something weird, somethinghappens to your body, you've got
some type of pain, some type ofrash, whatever it might be, you
go and go.
Yeah, yeah.
So now the old school way wouldhave been like a rub some
garlic on it.
Yeah.
Now, are you better or worsefor Googling it over knowing to
rub some garlic on it?
(48:20):
Even though, hey, even thoughI've heard of old school things
where they're like, go rub anonion on it and it fucking
works.
Yeah.
Right?
The placebo.
Whatever it is.
Placebo, if it works, it works,it works.
Like, who gives a fuck?
Oh, but it only works becauseyou believe it.
And I got the result.
Who cares?
Um give me some garlic.
(48:40):
Yeah, give me some fuckinggarlic.
Is the person better forknowing that stuff, or are they
better for having the ability togo and search?
Like right now, if you and anold person.
Same difference.
So me and me and my bestfriend.
If you if you and an old personuh can't wait for you to get
(49:02):
fucking gray hair, we're in achimney.
Yeah, we're in a position likethat.
It's like you're probablybetter off.
You're probably better offbecause you can probably work it
out and they're probably gonnatry and rub garlic on it.
Like, or whatever their oldschool methodology is.
You know what I mean?
Drink fucking peppermint tea,whatever they do.
Like they have all sorts of,you know, you got a stomach
ache.
What it what do what do Greekpeople do with stomach aches?
(49:23):
Um Lebos make you put your feetin hot water.
George (49:27):
And it fucking works.
Hey, I've heard I've heard thatfor migraines.
Oh, dude, it boils boilingwater and put your feet in it.
Put your feet in it.
What put your very hot waterand put your feet in it um for a
migraine.
I actually haven't tried itbefore, but I want to.
I don't know if it's a stomachache, works a treat.
Robby (49:40):
Oh, never knew that one.
Wild.
Yeah, there you go.
You heard it here first.
George (49:43):
Heard it here first.
Um, yeah, maybe a chamomile teaor something like that.
Robby (49:47):
Yeah.
Have you I've heard that ifyou've got I wouldn't even say a
chamomile tea is still a morerecent is it?
Like as uh a 90-year-old's notgonna be like we used to have
chamomile tea in the 30s.
They're not gonna say that.
They're not I don't know whatthe I don't know what the
equivalent is.
Um but do you get what I'msaying?
Yeah.
In the sense, so are you betteroff for being able to do that
(50:08):
now?
Yeah, now yeah, absolutely.
Okay, so are these people gonnabe better off for having the
nouse to go and searcheverything straight away instead
of wasting their time trying tofigure it out?
Yeah, it's the equivalent of ifyou if you were to zoom in a
little bit and you said, like,okay, cool, I'm fixing a car
with someone, an old schoolmechanic, and his thing is like,
I'm gonna try and work it outand look at it, and you watch
(50:29):
the YouTube video with it.
George (50:31):
Let's let's let's do
let's do this.
Let's pretend we're at the cafeand everyone here, there's six
people, and they're all tryingto figure out like the tables
lopsided.
Robby (50:42):
You've got a serious
table lopsided like that.
George (50:47):
All right, okay, go and
they're all there and they pull
out and like they're all doingthat, right?
They're like, fuck.
And they all pull out theirphones, all six of them, and
they're like, Why, or all fiveof them?
Why is the table lobsided?
And by the time they finish,I've already gone under and
fixed the table.
And they look, they all look atme and they go, Wow, like what
the fuck?
(51:07):
How did you do that?
Do you reckon they would thenbe impressed by that?
Do you know what I mean?
Like, in the sense of how didyou figure that out?
Are you some sort of a fuckinggenius that you did it without
chat?
That's fucking weird, man.
You're a freak.
Yeah, I get what you're saying.
It's like I don't know.
Is there a level of people likebecoming too like would they
(51:30):
become too dependent on it?
Yes, yes.
That's what I mean.
So then not to be able tocritical think from a let's see,
I'm just like survival of thefittest type scenario.
Or are they the fittest andwe're not?
Do you know what I mean?
Like, is is is there a level ofneeding to have critical
thinking?
Like, should I step in front ofthe tram?
(51:52):
Should I step in front of thetram?
Let me fucking just get chat atright now.
Yeah, I don't think we I don'tthink that that's exactly to
that extent.
But I'm saying does it get tothe table?
I get what you're level does itget to the level where you're
even if it's plugged into yourear, hey Chatch, what's what's
the what's the issue with thistable?
And then before they've evengot the answer, someone's just
gone there and fixed it.
(52:13):
I don't know.
Is that I still feel thatthere's gonna be a level of
people being able to think forthemselves.
Robby (52:19):
A specific scenario.
George (52:21):
I know a specific one.
I'm just trying, but why whycan't we?
Um if we can't apply that toother specifics.
Robby (52:28):
Yeah, I think it's gonna
get less that'll become less
less the same way.
Someone you could be like, I'vegot this pain here, and they're
like, go do this.
But out of a hundred people,there might be one person who
can give you a home remedy now.
Speaker 1 (52:39):
Yeah.
Robby (52:39):
Whereas 60 years ago, 80%
of people might have known a
home type remedy.
But it's just become lessprevalent because now it's like,
well, go see a doctor or go seea having easy access to
doctors, has that been better orworse?
Because it's definitely madeyou know less about yourself
because every time somethinggoes wrong, they need to go to
the doctor.
(53:00):
Yeah, potentially, but this isthe same.
But but the thing is criticalthinking is so fucking
important.
You know what I mean?
And um yeah, I don't know.
I'm playing devil's advocatehere, by the way.
I do part of me heavily thinksit's important and I believe
unless it becomes completelyirrelevant, I think it's gonna
(53:24):
matter.
Which is irrelevant.
That's my two cents.
Heard it here first.
So if you want to be a criticalthinker.
George (53:38):
Okay, you know
everything you know right now.
You're ahead of the game.
Would you say you're ahead ofthe game when it comes to AI?
Robby (53:45):
What's the game?
George (53:46):
Are you ahead of 80% of
the people when it comes to AI?
Robby (53:52):
90% of the people.
Wait, I'd be I'd I would go onas far as as saying I'm in the
point zero one.
George (53:58):
Yeah.
I walk into your office.
Yeah.
Sorry, anyone say something?
Robby (54:02):
No.
But I was gonna say, like, mostthat's because most people have
no fucking idea.
George (54:05):
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
So I walk into your officeyesterday, I'm like, how you
going?
And you go, I'm not abillionaire yet.
You're pissed off.
I said yet.
Yeah, but you're pissed off.
Do you feel that this is thevehicle that's gonna take you
there?
Because I've heard so manythings that AI is gonna make
more multi-millionaires thananything else in the next five
years.
Robby (54:25):
Yeah, but like, so you've
got to look at it like this.
The people who invented thingsthat were applicable for the
internet wrote a big wave.
So think like someone who madeYouTube back, millionaire.
But like YouTube was just aplatform that leveraged the
internet.
So this is gonna be somethingsimilar.
Like it might be someone whocreates a particular mechanic
for a robotic arm that allows itto feel.
George (54:45):
Does that make sense?
Yeah, so if I've lost my armand I have a robotic arm, and
when I pick up the Coke can, Ican feel that it's cold.
Robby (54:52):
Yeah, like think about
that level of technology.
Yeah, I'm not gonna inventthat.
Come on, give it a go.
I just I'm not a field I'minterested in.
Um not interested in that.
But I think there is a hugeopportunity with uh helping
people implement this into theirlives, you know what I mean,
into their businesses.
(55:13):
You know, uh we've been doingAI implementation sessions, and
to be honest, I'm sharing somebasic stuff and people are blown
away.
George (55:21):
Yeah, but is that from
our recent training?
Robby (55:25):
Yeah, and people are
blown away though.
They're like, oh, I never knewyou could do that.
I'm like, dude, like this isnot this is not even new.
George (55:32):
Are you finding people
are coming back from those
sessions?
Robby (55:36):
Yeah, I think we're
finding people are have we're
finding custom solutions forpeople to save them time.
Yeah, because that's what it'sgonna do for you, AI.
It's gonna save you time andallow you to do a better job.
And we're finding particularthings based on people's
businesses uh where they'llinvest you know a thousand
(55:59):
dollars and they'll save 20hours a month.
And then it's like also like 20hours a month for a one-off
investment?
It's like fuck that's a prettyfucking good return on on your
money.
Um that's all we're trying todo with people right now.
But I I think there's a hugeopportunity there.
Huge opportunity.
And I think this is I've saidthis before, I've said it a
(56:20):
million times.
This is creating YouTube videosin 2009.
You know, and everyone's like,no.
Like, think about it.
What were we doing in 2009?
George (56:33):
I was in 2009.
I was in year nine.
So what?
Am I 2002?
No, sorry.
It was 1999, I was in yearnine.
So 09.
Yeah, I was working, man.
What were we doing?
How old are you?
I don't know.
30 uh uh 26?
(56:55):
Yeah, so mid-20s?
Yeah, what were we doing?
What were you doing?
Working at a I think it wasAbbey Group at that stage.
Robby (57:02):
So imagine I can't uh
it's just the my job.
Yeah, but I want you to thinkspecifically to like a a
particular event at that time.
Okay?
So what were you doing?
What what what site were youworking on?
George (57:16):
Yeah, on a school.
Building schools.
Where about Cranburn.
Robby (57:21):
Fuck.
Cranberne's been around since2009.
Fuck.
Anyway, then then imagineGeorge you didn't we were you
didn't know me, but I was one ofthe workers there.
And I turned to you and I'mlike, hey George, we should make
videos of us at work.
And you would have looked at meand said, Don't touch me.
Fuck off.
That's what you would havesaid.
You would have been like,You're a fucking idiot.
And do some real work.
(57:42):
That's what you would that youespecially you especially would
have said that.
You'd have been like, fuck off,go do some real work, stop
being lazy.
George (57:50):
I remember when the
iPhone actually came out.
When did the iPhone come out?
The first one.
You know what you are?
2004.
Was it that early?
Was it then?
I don't think it was then,then.
Or five.
Robby (58:05):
How old was I no no, hold
on.
2000.
Yeah, no, no.
Something like that.
Really?
George (58:10):
I thought it was later,
man.
I thought it was like around09.
I'll tell you when it was.
Okay, I've got a bit bettermemory now.
So I just started at AbbeyGroup in 09.
Robby (58:22):
2007.
George (58:23):
7, 8, 9.
Okay, so yeah, all right.
I remember when one of thefirst well the first iPhone I
ever saw was an employee, one ofthe guys I worked with showed
how to phone.
All right, you remember thatbeer app?
Yeah, and it'll hold it andpretend you drink that.
He showed me that, and I waslike, is that what it does?
Yeah, cool.
Look at my phone.
(58:44):
G'day, mate.
Hi.
Um, what was the point of thatstory?
So, yeah, that was when thefirst that's the first time I
saw an iPhone, let alone everhaving one or a smart device.
So, yeah, had you had you hadeven said to me, Let's make a
(59:04):
video, I'd be like, did thefirst iPhone have a camera in
it?
Robby (59:07):
Did no?
George (59:08):
Yeah, I think you could
take photos, yeah.
But I don't think you could uhother than that, that's pretty
much it.
But I'm saying, what a weirdconcept for someone to say, Hey,
let's make videos and just youknow, we'll we'll post them on
the internet.
Robby (59:19):
Yeah, but most new
concepts before we're used to
them sound weird.
Speaker 1 (59:24):
Yeah.
Robby (59:25):
Like in the sense of if
you told people like, hey, take
a photo of your food and postit, most people would be like,
Why would I just wild, what awild thing to do until one
person did, and then everyonewas like, Oh, that looks great.
And then it was like, Oh, like,look at the positive
reinforcement.
You know what I mean?
And now it's like we've got afucking there's people who make
livings off that now goingaround and eating food.
(59:46):
I was doing p2 reviews.
There's people that go aroundmaking a living.
Hey, I'm well overview.
I'm also overweight.
That's what I'm over.
George (59:55):
Um I had a pizza the
other day.
Pizza's good.
We should have a pizza night.
Here?
Yeah.
unknown (01:00:01):
Yeah.
George (01:00:01):
Yeah.
Let's do it soon.
Next week.
Oh not next week.
What next?
No, we're busy next week.
No, I'm busy.
We're both busy.
Uh the week after.
Done.
Why?
Why are you both busy nextweek?
Um I've got a training on nextweek.
I don't know.
I think weren't you away nextweek?
No, it's not this.
It's the week after.
This we're still in October.
Yeah, no, didn't you say you onMelbourne Cup weekend you're
(01:00:22):
going away, aren't you?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Uh November.
Robby (01:00:25):
Yeah.
Um but yes, we should do that.
We should have to do that.
Let's go get the guys here, getsome guys here from site.
Um how did we get there?
Yeah.
Most most new things peopletend to have a little bit of
pushback on.
And right this is now that.
This is the same thing, George.
Speaker 1 (01:00:42):
Yeah.
Robby (01:00:42):
Do you know what I mean?
The same way people weren'tusing chat when it first came
out.
Just because it's had a quickeruh adaptation than or adaption
than most things, like peoplehave adopted to it much faster.
George (01:00:52):
It doesn't Yeah, that's
right.
People have it.
I think people do adopt tothings a little bit more now.
Robby (01:00:56):
Well, it's just less
strange.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, we kind of informationspreads faster now.
It does, it spreads way faster.
Yeah.
So it's like we be we we hearabout it and become, but there's
still people who don't usechat.
My mum won't use chat.
Yeah.
She freaked when she did talkback to me.
How funny.
You don't you know if you talkto chat in a different language,
(01:01:17):
it replies back in thelanguage.
George (01:01:19):
Yes, that's so cool.
My dad did it the other day.
We were talking Greek.
He he was using he's got a paidversion of Gemini though.
And then he starts talkingEnglish and then he goes, and he
starts swearing at it at justout of just it was funny.
Um and it started respondingback in Greek.
And we couldn't believe it, itwas so funny.
Robby (01:01:36):
Yeah, yeah.
It's they speak all languages.
All of them, who would havethought?
George (01:01:41):
Yeah, it's it's funny.
It is like especially peoplethat don't my wife, I don't
think, uses it very much at all,if any.
And just the other day, I waslike when I was just having a
call, I was asking, I wasspeaking to chat on there, and
she was like blown away justbecause of the way it was
responding to the questions Iwas asking it.
Robby (01:01:58):
I think um and and you're
always gonna have the people
who don't adapt.
There's still people right nowthat are like the internet, you
know what I mean?
George (01:02:08):
Honestly, I was
surprised at our last at the
last training I did that therewas someone in the room who had
a business but didn't have awebsite.
And not like I've just startedmy business and I'm still
building it.
I've been building for yearsand I don't have a website.
Like, why don't you have one?
Don't need one.
It's like saying, I don't know,I find that odd.
It's like saying I don't have amobile number.
(01:02:30):
Just call the just fax me.
unknown (01:02:33):
Yeah.
Robby (01:02:34):
Imagine that I'm sure
there's someone out there who
does that.
George (01:02:37):
Do you know there's I
see on email signatures or even
like invoices and some or someshit, I still have a fax number.
That upsets me.
That upsets me a lot.
A fax number.
I'd send you a fax.
Robby (01:02:53):
Speaking of having stuff
on your invoices and stuff,
nothing bothers me more thanhaving it at gmail.com.
George (01:02:58):
Nothing bothers me more.
Silly.
If you're listening to the andwhat you mean by that is Robbie
Holmes at Robbie Robbie RobbieDigital Marketing Pt Y L T
Dobbby Cmail.com Robbie C atGmail.com.
Um Yeah, that's the biggest itis, it's silly in this day and
(01:03:21):
age.
Absolutely silly.
Robby (01:03:24):
But yeah, that's my AI
rant for today.
I think uh if you have aMacBook, maybe by the time this
comes out, maybe they've droppedit on PC.
I'm not sure.
On Windows.
George (01:03:37):
Let me know.
Oh, you won't know.
Robby (01:03:39):
Me?
I wanna know.
George (01:03:40):
I'm gonna ask it when I
get out.
Robby (01:03:42):
Yeah.
Uh but maybe they will.
And then if it has, I think Ihighly recommend if you've got a
MacBook, you can go check itout right now.
It's free, yeah.
So if you've already got chat,you just need to sign in.
You don't have to pay for it.
It's literally like downloadingany other browser.
It's called ChatGPT Atlas.
Uh, you can type it in search,you can Google it.
Google it to replace Google.
(01:04:04):
Um, and then download it, giveit a crack.
I think it's quite cool.
There's also a YouTube videowhere you can actually watch a
20-minute presentation on Israelapp.
Uh good question.
Let's find out right now ifthere's an app.
I don't think so.
But that's not to say thatthere won't be.
Chat GPT Atlas.
(01:04:26):
No.
Not yet.
But it'll come.
Um, and then it can do thingsfor you.
And I think I genuinely think,unless you're in the middle of
calculating your numbers andjumping on a trampoline, you
will most likely be impressed.
(01:04:46):
Uh, but if you do get a chanceto check it out, I would love to
know what you think.
Send me a DM.
Send me an email, send mesomething.
George (01:04:56):
Get even better, get
Atlas to send Robert something.
Robby (01:04:59):
Atlas.
Yeah, that's what we call itnow.
That's it.
It's changed.
No more chat?
No.
Do you ever go to say hey chatand it writes hey Jack?
And then you're like, ah, fuckit.
I'll just keep I'll just rollwith it.
I'll just roll with it.
Mine says Chad.
George (01:05:13):
Chad?
Yeah, so I'll be like, when Ido voice to text.
Or when I'm speaking to it, itsays hey Chad.
I'm like, I didn't say Chad.
I said Chad.
C-H-A-D.
Robby (01:05:22):
C-H-A-T.
George (01:05:23):
No, I it it it hears me
say it thinks I said Chad with a
D.
Yeah, so it's better than Jack.
Much better than Jack.
Do you know a weird thing?
And just the in closing.
I feel like used to alwayshappen to me.
Always happen to me.
And it I used to think it wasjust a coincidence, but it's it
(01:05:45):
happens too often not to be.
I'll pick up my phone, someonecalls me that I don't know, or
whatever it might be.
I said, hello, George speaking.
Alright, that's generally howI'll answer the phone if I don't
know the number.
And they respond with, I'll getA.
Stewart.
No way.
I swear to God, bro.
I swear to God.
Actually, what would be funny?
(01:06:06):
Check this out.
Robby (01:06:10):
What's his name?
That's a um I'll tell you whatI think that have you ever have
Keep going.
George (01:06:16):
I'm gonna call the guy
on space.
Because seeing as we're callingpeople live, I I have never
corrected him.
He actually saved my name asStuart in his phone, I'm pretty
sure.
Robby (01:06:26):
So every time I call him,
he goes, get a Stuart.
What do you mean they have aphone call on the podcast?
I'm just gonna go take up onhim.
So it's so many.
Sorry, mate.
Sorry, I'm gonna meet off.
By the way, if you do that, ifyou get calls and you pick them
up and then say, sorry, I'm in ameeting, that is one of the
most on both sides.
To be the person in the meetingwith you is annoying, and to be
(01:06:48):
the person calling you, youpick up the call and then you
introduce yourself and then likeoh I'm in a meeting.
And it's like why'd you answerthough?
George (01:06:54):
Yeah, you don't want to
talk to me.
Robby (01:06:56):
Why'd you answer the
call?
George (01:06:57):
Let it go through to the
key.
Robby (01:06:58):
Yeah, why don't you just
let it go through?
I would have left you avoicemail, sent you a text, and
called you three more times thatday.
unknown (01:07:04):
No.
George (01:07:05):
Or you could have just
left one of those voice messages
to text, because Robbie lovesthose.
Yeah, big fan.
Robby (01:07:10):
Big fan.
Voice uh what are they called?
Audio memo.
I don't know.
Audio memos.
Um, yeah, go check it out.
ChatGPT Atlas.
Um, you can check it out, Stu.
George (01:07:23):
Yeah, 100%.
Stu.
Get on to it.
Yeah, I will.
As soon as it's available onPC, I will definitely download
it.
I will definitely download it.
Not gonna go buy a Mac.
I'll not find a Mac.
Never be Mac.
PC all the way.
Although I've got an iPhone andI won't change that.
Robby (01:07:42):
Creature of habit.
Man doesn't like change.
Creature of habit.
Um check it out, you won'tregret it.
Uh it's pretty cool.
And it's pretty user-friendlytoo.
George (01:07:50):
Yeah, that's what you
want.
Want it to be easy.
Robby (01:07:53):
Don't want it to have to
learn how to write code to use
it.
And let me know if you do.
I'd uh I'd love to hear whatyou can get it to do.
George (01:08:01):
Excellent.
Well, guys, thank you so muchfor tuning in on another episode
of Million Dollar Days.
I hope you're having a milliondollar day.
Robby (01:08:09):
And if you're not having
a million dollar day, it's
probably because you're notwhere you're at where you want
to be with your business.
Probably not.
And so, George, what'shappening on November 18th,
November 20th?
George (01:08:19):
Well, if you are living
in Melbourne or Perth, or are
you living no no Melbourne orPerth?
Yeah, no, like Adelaide's inthe middle.
Oh, you didn't let me finish.
Oh, sorry.
Okay.
So let me start again.
So if you live in Melbourne orPerth, or any other state within
Australia.
Except Tasmania.
Except Tasmania.
We don't like you guys.
It's too cold.
(01:08:39):
Way too cold.
We have the Builder Summitcoming up.
A one-day interactive event.
Not interactive, that'sprobably not the right word.
Intensive event, where you guysget to come in and spend the
day with us, where we get toteach you all systems,
processes, practical things thatyou can implement into your
construction business.
Robbie will be starring themarketing and AI presentation
(01:09:04):
part of the day.
And then I will be focusingmore on proper systems and
processes that you can usewithin your construction
business to help you scale, tohelp you grow, and to really get
into 2026 with a bang.
Because I find at the momentmost people in construction
anyway are just solely focusedon getting to the 20th or the
19th of December, their last dayof the year, and moving heaven
(01:09:26):
and earth to try and eitherfinish a project or get to a
certain stage.
And where they trip up, in myopinion, and what I've seen over
the years is they're so focusedon the next eight weeks, they
don't even plan for 26.
And I think that's a mistake.
I think that's leaving it toyour competition to take care
of.
And when you do that, you willlose.
(01:09:48):
So if you want to win, registeryour details for the Builders
Summit.
I'm sure the boys will link itin the comments or something
below.
Girls.
Of course they will.
Girls.
The girls.
The girls.
Girls good.
Girls can do just as much aswhat the boys can do.
Yeah, probably won't be asgood, but shit.
Shit.
Robby (01:10:07):
Shots.
We'll just get shorts wet.
George (01:10:10):
When I mean by boys or
girls, we're talking about chat
will do it all.
Robby (01:10:14):
Yes, of course.
George (01:10:15):
It's not Robbie's not
going to do it.
AI is uh gender neutral.
Robby (01:10:19):
That's right.
George (01:10:20):
Yeah.
Robby (01:10:20):
That's right.
It's uh non-binary.
It's not non-binary.
George (01:10:24):
It is that.
So he'll get his AI agents todo all the work for us to make
it easy for you to register.
And the beauty is it's a freeevent.
It is a free event.
We do we have done everythingin our power to make it easy for
you to get to the event.
All you have to do is rock up.
Now, there are paid versionstoo, or paid option bonuses.
If you want some of thebonuses, there are bonuses
(01:10:45):
there.
I'm not going to go into them,but there are gold and VIP
tickets available for which youdo get a little bit extra and a
few more perks.
But either way, it's going tobe an experience like no other.
Yeah, you don't want to missit.
Robby (01:10:58):
And and touching on what
you said just then as well about
the people who are focusing onthe future and trying to get to
December 19th.
Is that the last day?
George (01:11:06):
Yeah, it's going to be
for me.
Like a Friday.
Yeah, Friday.
Robby (01:11:09):
Yeah, okay.
So people focused on that.
I heard this great quote today,and I shared it to my story.
And it was Jimmy Carr.
And he goes, People are sofocused on the future.
Like we're always focused onlike getting that thing and the
next thing.
It's like, you know, oh yeah,yeah, I'm gonna can't wait to
get the next year, or can't waitto finish this, or can't wait
until I finish work today, orlike, you know, fuck, it's been
a rough week.
(01:11:29):
I can't wait for the weekend.
We're always like focusing onand he's like you will give up
in 25 years, you will give upeverything to have today's
health.
He's like, you'll give upeverything materialistically,
you'll give up all ever all themoney, everything you've earned,
all the goals, everythingyou've achieved to have the
(01:11:51):
health you have today and howyou feel today, like the
physical ability.
Like you would give it all upin an instant to come back to
where you are right now.
And that really grounded mewhen I heard it, because I was
like, I feel all right, feelgood, might go get a pizza.
Um and I think sometimes wejust need to focus on the
(01:12:12):
present, like now, like this isnow, right now, nothing else
matters.
Now that's it.
This is all that you have infront of you.
And whilst it's good to havegoals and work towards things,
it's like be present in thismoment.
I think that's the mostpowerful thing.
George (01:12:28):
So powerful.
It is so true though.
So true.
So true, yeah.
Look, we're goal-makingmachines, aren't we?
Robby (01:12:34):
Yeah, it's like the
thing.
Even uh Alex Homozy did $100million in three days, and then
he kind of celebrated, and he'slike, Thanks, everyone, and then
like thanks, thanks, thanks.
He's like, All right, we'vecelebrated for three minutes,
let's move on to the next goal.
And he said it as a joke.
He's like, Isn't that what wedo?
Like we always do that, right?
We you know, work our assesoff, kick the thing, and then be
happy for three minutes, feelgood about myself, and what's
(01:12:57):
next?
And I was like, like you saidit in a joking way, but there
was a part of it you could tellthat kind of meant it.
Yeah, yeah.
George (01:13:04):
So do you think it's
important then once you do
achieve that goal to have thatlike that rest and that reward
for yourself?
Like, yes and no.
Do what you want.
That's what you want.
Yeah, I agree with you.
I agree with it.
But you were saying withgrounding yourself in the
moment.
Robby (01:13:18):
Yeah, but I think like
even when you don't get the
thing, like, hey man, you'refucking here now.
You're alive.
Do you know what I mean?
Like you're here right now, andit's like there's points in
life where like you would killto have these problems and these
problems alone.
You know what I mean?
George (01:13:32):
There's this thing that
I want to do at a training
because I think it's a reallypowerful thing.
And you know how we do littlethings like you know, how many
weeks you got left in your lifeand all that sort of stuff.
But there was this one prothing that I saw, it was a guy
and he was reading off a pieceof paper because it he had to,
unless he memorized everything.
It's like for you to be hereright now, to be sitting in this
chair talking to me, you had tohave two parents.
(01:13:52):
All right, you had to have fourgrandparents, you had to have
you know, so on and so forth.
And he kept going up until andit was only like you can't count
past four, huh?
No, fuck sixteen, four, foursof sixteen.
Well fours.
No, so because each personwould have two.
Two, yeah.
So what's that?
Eight, eight, and then six, soit doubles each time.
Robby (01:14:11):
It just yeah, doubles
each time.
George (01:14:12):
Okay, whatever it's
gonna be.
32, and he kept going.
I should have.
You should have.
And he kept going all the way.
He only went whatever it was10, 20, generate, whatever it
was, and the number wasastronomical.
Yeah, and it's like it's like1200 astronomical.
Yeah, yeah.
But that's like those 1200people had to meet.
Yeah, unless like their theirlives had to meet at some and
(01:14:35):
intersect at some point in time.
Robby (01:14:37):
Unless your parents are
cousins.
Why?
Because then they'd run throughthe same single.
It's like a you've you'reruining my vibe.
Haven't you heard that thing?
Yep your your family tree islike a one-sided branch, like
it's like it's like kids,cousins and cousins.
I haven't heard that.
Must be a libero joke.
George (01:14:55):
It has to be a libo
joke, 100%.
So, but it was just it was cooljust to really just go, fuck,
you know what?
That is so true.
There's like 5,000 people thathad to meet at an exact moment
in time and have sex at thatexact moment, and for that one
(01:15:16):
millionth uh piece of whatever,for you just to be sitting here
right now, like the probability,and I think Gary V says it as
well.
It's like it's like 400trillion to one.
And people don't fathom that.
Like when he says that, peopledon't, oh yeah, whatever, I'm
lucky.
Woo-hoo.
But when you actually look atit from that perspective and go,
look how many of yourgenerations had to come together
(01:15:39):
for you just to be sitting heretoday, and what the fuck are
you doing?
You know, and you're just whatare you wasting your life?
You're feeling sorry foryourself.
How lucky are you to even befucking alive right now?
It's the law of familiarity.
Yeah.
Uh it is, but and that's whyit's great to be grounded when
you hear things like that and tohave that mindset and to have
that level of in the it's funny,dude.
Robby (01:16:01):
In the exact same clip,
he says, I think we suffer from
life dysmorphia.
He goes, We forget how greatour lives are.
He goes, hundred years ago, hegoes, like you you could be
having a warm shower and noteven care.
He goes, hundred years ago,anyone you respected from a
hundred years ago never had thatpleasure, never got to have a
hot shower.
George (01:16:17):
They probably just
didn't have them because it was
so unpleasant.
Robby (01:16:19):
So unpleasant?
George (01:16:20):
Yeah, like they didn't
have showers at all.
Robby (01:16:22):
Yeah, no, they didn't
have showers, yeah.
They didn't and they're gonnahave the ability to have hot
water running at whateverpressure you want.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
And it's like we get all thesethings and we just it's normal.
unknown (01:16:32):
Yeah.
Robby (01:16:32):
When was did you jump in
the shower and sit there?
Wow, what a shower.
What a life.
Yeah.
Most people don't.
I'm gonna do it tonight.
It's gonna be great.
All right, on that note, guys,thanks for listening.
If you haven't already, we'restill trying to grow the
subscriber channel.
It's grown a little bit, butwe're nowhere near near it.
What we need to do.
Jump onto YouTube.
We're gonna uh implement acouple of changes.
(01:16:52):
I've got a couple of things Ineed to discuss with you.
Good, do it.
Also, you're probably gonna seemore clips because we're going
to have.
You know what?
I'm just gonna leave it for thepeople to see it.
Cliffhanger.
And um leaving it on acliffhanger.
And we're gonna leave it atthat.
But if you really want to knowwhat it is, you're probably
gonna have to check out theInstagram page.
George (01:17:09):
And also YouTube.
We need to grow the YouTube.
Yeah.
Robby (01:17:12):
Get on the YouTube
channel, subscribe at million
dollar dayspod.
Anything else you'd like totell them, George?
George (01:17:17):
No, that's all.
Just take the action andappreciate the moment.
If you're lucky to be here.
And download ChatGPT Alice.
Boom.
All right.
Thanks, everyone.
Thanks, guys.